Abstract: | Data from 28 families ascertained through a proband with juvenile periodontitis were used to test a series of Mendelian models of inheritance that included both autosomal and X-linked transmission. There was strong evidence of familial aggregation of this progressive dental disease, and the best-fitting model was an autosomal recessive model. Because of the rather limited age range for expression of the disease in this situation, simulations were done, in a model-choice analysis using samples of this size, to assess the chance of mistaking an autosomal dominant disease (with masking of the affected phenotype outside a specified age range) for an autosomal recessive disease. While the rate of Type II error was fairly high (40%) when competing models in these simulations were compared, these data suggest that it is reasonable to infer that juvenile periodontitis is an autosomal recessive disorder. |